The conference, organized by the OSCE Secretariat’s Transnational Threats Department/Strategic Police Matters Unit in close co-operation with the Slovak OSCE Chairmanship and the support of the Austrian Federal Ministry of the Interior, will take stock of the implementation of the OSCE’s flagship two-year regional project “Capacity Building for Criminal Justice Practitioners Combating Cybercrime and Cyber-enabled Crime in South-Eastern Europe” with the purpose to identify key lessons learned, good practices and remaining gaps.

The report contains state of play information at the national and bilateral/international levels in Albania and Montenegro with regards to systems, structures, practices and mechanisms, followed by conclusions and recommendations. This is the Volume 3 in the SPMU Publication series.

The goal of this annual meeting is to facilitate discussions of experts from participating states, international and regional organisations and OSCE executive structures to identify the crucial links and interfaces among the various sectors of the Criminal Justice System throughout the successive phases of their development and reform to increase the effectiveness of the police and the other sectors alike, thus enhancing the sustainability of reform efforts in the wider Criminal Justice System.

The workshop is intended to give police supervisors, appellate level prosecutors and judges new information on computer crimes, computer forensics, and cyber evidence retrieval during while investigating and prosecuting sexual abuse of children on the Internet

The objective of the conference is to encourage efforts and increase awareness and international capacity to uphold the rule of law, while protecting and promoting human rights within a counter-terrorism context, by instituting adequate criminal offences, criminal procedure tools and law enforcement capacities.

The goal of this online forum is to facilitate discussions among Criminal Justice System experts from the OSCE participating States, OSCE executive structures and international and national organizations on the topic of holistic police reform within the reform of the wider Criminal justice System (CJS).

This Guidebook identifies the interfaces in the criminal justice process among the various institutions of the CJS and between them and other relevant governmental agencies as well as non-governmental security and justice providers and civil society. It elaborates on a number of good practices in addressing these interfaces in practical reform steps and identifies options for enhancing international co-operation in following a holistic CJS reform (CJSR) approach.